While I am now back in the office, showered and clean, from my 2013 Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival experience in Manchester, TN here’s a look back at the daily video diaries…in case you missed them by Videographer Karen Kraft as she chronicled her adventures at Bonnaroo!

Bonnaroo Diary Day One: Celebrity sightings and Cigar-box guitars!

The Tennessean arrived to Manchester, TN, the site of the 2013 Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival. Soon after settling in, I embarked on my journey to cover the festival and share my adventures through photos, videos and more!

Bonnaroo Diary Day Two: Jack Johnson, ‘Roonies in costume and more!

Jack Johnson performs a private media only set, a daredevil ‘Roonie walking the tight-rope and a glimpse of Nashville in Manchester. Videographer Karen Kraft chronicles her adventures while at the 2013 Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival in Manch

Bonnaroo Diary Day Three: Silent Disco, Where’s Waldo and more!

Day Three: A look at the popular Silent Disco, a Where’s Waldo sighting and our RV campsite neighbors highlight day 3 from Bonnaroo. Videographer Karen Kraft chronicles her adventures while at the 2013 Bonnaroo Music & Arts festival.

Bonnaroo Diary Day Four: Bjork, Billy Idol and fun Vine videos

Bjork wows with her presence on the main stage, Billy Idol’s Rebel Yell and my vine videos from my weekend at Bonnaroo.

All in all, my Bonnaroo experience, was one to remember. It was tough, lugging equipment around all day to capture video moments, taking photos and doing live video shots each morning but I have to admit…how the heck can you complain? Im standing here in the middle of a cow field turned music festival with celebrities, comedians, music and more and I get the added benefit of seeing it through a media perspective. A multimedia perspective if you will…I am blessed…and honored to have been part of The Tennessean’s Bonnaroo coverage and I am glad I got to share my experiences through these video diaries.

While I will certainly miss the El Monte RV, the rocky pathways to the media tent, the photo pit, and even the miles and miles I have walked this weekend from one end of the festival to the other each day, I am positive that I will thoroughly enjoy sleeping in my own bed soon and a nice hot shower!

]]>http://blogs.tennessean.com/hashnash/2013/06/19/missed-out-on-bonnaroo-this-year-experience-it-through-these-video-diaries/feed/0Don’t miss these top wild and wacky videoshttp://blogs.tennessean.com/hashnash/2013/06/19/dont-miss-these-top-wild-and-wacky-videos/
http://blogs.tennessean.com/hashnash/2013/06/19/dont-miss-these-top-wild-and-wacky-videos/#commentsWed, 19 Jun 2013 15:27:15 +0000Karen Krafthttp://blogs.tennessean.com/hashnash/?p=1187World’s largest swimming lesson
Children participated in the world’s largest simultaneous swimming lesson at 14 pools in Middle Tennessee.

Watermelon Oreos… They do exist!
The latest limited edition Oreo is perfect for summer. Photos of Watermelon Oreos are popping up on blogs, proving the odd-flavored cookies exist. Patrick Jones, from Buzz 60, looks at some other weird Oreo flavors that have made the shelves.

Miss Utah flubs interview, steals Miss USA’s spotlight
Erin Brady was crowned Miss USA 2013, but it’s Miss Utah who is grabbing headlines. Marissa Powell’s answer to a question about equal pay for women had a lot of people scratching their heads.

Reporter soaked by firefighting helicopter at wildfire
Scores of additional homes have been evacuated, as firefighters continue to battle a wildfire near the main route into Yosemite National Park in the Sierra foothills of California.

Man returns home from vacation to pink princess bedroom makeover
According to a Reddit post, a man came home from a 2-month vacation to find his roommates gave his bedroom a pink princess makeover.

Man charged with DUI on motorized shopping cart
A 63-year-old man from Fairbanks, Alaska was arrested and charged with a DUI for driving a motorized cart while allegedly drunk. Police say he took cookies and cake mix from a store, and was driving away in his cart when an employee stopped him.

Lipscomb University

Belmont dorm room

Tennessee State University

Fox 17

Vanderbilt Hustler

Hume Fogg High School

Adventure Science Center

Brentwood Home Depot

MTSU

]]>http://blogs.tennessean.com/hashnash/2013/02/22/nashville-does-the-harlem-shake/feed/0Super Bowl Sunday spots to look forhttp://blogs.tennessean.com/hashnash/2013/02/02/super-bowl-sunday-spots-to-look-for/
http://blogs.tennessean.com/hashnash/2013/02/02/super-bowl-sunday-spots-to-look-for/#commentsSat, 02 Feb 2013 23:14:42 +0000Karen Krafthttp://blogs.tennessean.com/hashnash/?p=980Celebrities, humor, babies and cute animals will once again rule the commercial breaks on Sunday during Super Bowl XLVII, advertising’s biggest showcase, when more than 111 million people are expected to tune in. Marketers have spent millions and pulled out all the stops to “wow: viewers this year.

Here are 10 spots they hope will make you skip the bathroom break or beer run during the big game:

1. Samsung Mobile’s two-minute ad in the fourth quarter called “The Big Pitch” stars “Knocked Up” actors Paul Rudd and Seth Rogen and was directed by Jon Favreau (“Iron Man”). The company has not released details about the ad’s plot other than to say that it shows Rogen and Rudd on a “quest to become the next big thing.” A teaser ad shows Rogen and Rudd trying to talk about a Super Bowl ad without saying the words “Super Bowl.”

(AP Photo/Best Buy)

2. Best Buy’s 30-second ad in the first quarter stars Amy Poehler, star of NBC’s “Parks and Rec,” asking a Best Buy employee “lots of questions.”

(PR Newswire Association LLC,Jersey City,New Jersey)

3. Kraft enlists Tracy Morgan from NBC’s “30 Rock” to introduce its new Mio Fit water-enhancing drops in a 30-second ad during the third quarter.

4. Hyundai Motor Group’s Kia invents a fanciful way that babies are made, blasting in from a baby planet in its “Space Babies” ad for the 2014 Sorento crossover.

(AP Photo/Paramount Farms)

5. First-time advertiser Paramount Farms is touting its Wonderful Pistachios brand of nut in a 30-second ad in the third quarter in its “Get Crackin’ ” campaign, which stars Korean pop sensation Psy.

(AP Photo/Axe)

6. First-time advertiser Axe’s 30-second ad in the third quarter of the game shows a woman in the ocean getting rescued by a sexy lifeguard, but going for an astronaut instead.

It promotes Axe’s new cologne “Apollo” and its contest to send someone on the first suborbital space tour in 2014.

7. Audi’s 60-second ad in the first quarter, with an ending voted on by viewers, shows a boy gaining confidence from driving his father’s Audi to the prom, kissing the prom queen and getting decked by the prom king.

(AP Photo PepsiCo)

8. PepsiCo’s Frito-Lay’s Doritos “Crash the Super Bowl” ads are back for the seventh straight year.

(AP Photo PepsiCo)

Two 30-second commercials made by consumers will make it on the air. Fans voted for one winner, and Doritos chose the other.

( AP Photo/Ford)

9. Ford Motor Co. enlisted late-night talk show host Jimmy Fallon to choose road trip stories submitted by Twitter with the hashtag steerthescript to base its Super Bowl commercial for Lincoln. The story line for the 30-second ad was developed from 6,117 tweets about road trips and features rapper Joseph “Rev Run” Simmons and Wil Wheaton, who acted in the iconic science-fiction series “Star Trek: The Next Generation.”

(AP Photo/Milk Processor Education Program)

10. The Milk Processor Education Program, known as MilkPep and popular for its “Got Milk?” print ads, is featuring actor and professional wrestler Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson in a 30-second ad in the second quarter that is directed by Peter Berg (“Friday Night Lights”).

Mae Anderson, Associated Press

And if those weren’t enough, here is a sneak peek of a few more commercials to be ready to gawk at during the game.

Taco Bell: This undated screenshot provided by Taco Bell shows the Super Bowl advertisement for Taco Bell. Gone are the days when Super Bowl spots were closely guarded secrets. With the growth of social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter, it’s no surprise that more advertisers like Taco Bell are releasing ads online up to a week or more before Game Day. (AP Photo/Taco Bell)

Pepsi: This undated screenshot provided by PepsiCo shows the Super Bowl advertisement for PepsiCo’s PepsiNext.For its halftime intro spot, Pepsi, the sponsor of the Super Bowl halftime show, created a collage of 1,000 user-submitted photos that are stitched together to create a 30-second video that looks like one person jumping to the tune of Beyonce’s “Countdown.” The spot introduces the pop star’s halftime show. (AP Photo/PepsiCo)

Mercedes Benz: This undated screenshot provided by Mercedes Benz shows the Super Bowl advertisement for the company. The majority of the 30-plus Super Bowl advertisers have been releasing their ads in the days leading up to the game. Advertising fans already can catch a glimpse of “Spider-Man” actor Willem Dafoe in a Mercedes-Benz ad. (AP Photo/Mercedes Benz)

Skechers: Skechers shows how to catch a cheetah in its new Super Bowl commercial.

Budweiser: Budweiser launched its official Twitter feed on January 27 with a tweet inviting fans to name the baby Clydesdale featured in its Super Bowl XLVII spot. (PRNewsFoto/Anheuser-Busch)

Darla, a 7-year-old Clydesdale, top, watches over her as-yet-unnamed foal at Warm Springs Ranch on Jan. 30 in Boonville, Mo. The foal, born Jan, 16, at the ranch, is the star of a Budweiser commercial set to air during Super Bowl XLVII on Sunday. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

Hyundai: Hyundai builds the ultimate Dream Team in its new Super Bowl ad. (PRNewsFoto/Hyundai Motor America)

Ever drive down the road, look in your rearview mirror and find that your heart has leaped into your throat? It’s something we all have faced while driving. Below is a list of 10 things you’d hate to see in your rearview mirror:

If you’ve been lucky enough to escape the flashing of red and blue lights in your rearview mirror, then kudos to you. Nevertheless, people dread the shimmer of a white car with these lights pulling up close behind them.

These two rambunctious country music singers are not what you want to find lurking behind you as you drive. In fact, you may be wishing for the No. 8 slot to come help rescue you. Randy Travis has had multiple run-ins with the law when it comes to drinking and driving, and George Jones once received a DUI when driving a tractor. So, if you see a nude Travis on a tractor with Jones, then you might want to make a run for it.

Ever seen 50 single headlights in geese formation creep up behind you on the road in the dark of night? Let’s hope you never do, especially if it’s the biker group, Hells Angels. Hells Angels is considered an organized crime syndicate by the U.S. Department of Justice, and membership is limited to those who steer away from law abiding jobs.

Living in Tennessee, you probably know a thing or two about tornadoes. It probably wouldn’t surprise you to find a tornado in your rearview mirror. Regardless, I’d find a low-lying area quickly, and duck and cover.

You might believe that this deserves to be up higher on the list, but think about it: Zombies are easy to outrun and definitely easier to outdrive. Sure, you might have to deal with the problem of when you run out of gas, but devise a plan and gather up your loved ones because it will be a bumpy ride.

Thankfully, we aren’t located on the coast, so the chances of a tsunami in your rearview mirror are slim. Nevertheless, these waves pack a punch, and a wall of water is hard to out drive considering the power behind these waves. Hope you packed your rubber ducky floaties and didn’t eat in the past hour.

You might think a volcano is harmless, but let’s hit the fact sheet. Lava is not what you have to worry about; it’s the pyroclastic flow that’s a killer. The pyroclastic flow is a mixture of hot, dry rock fragments and hot gases that move away from the vent where it erupted. This mixture typically travels at speeds greater than 50 mph at a temperature of 200 to 700 degrees Celcius, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. Unless you have a Ferrari, you’re probably doomed.

Forget zombies, volcanoes and blinking lights on a camera. You have met the ultimate image of destruction. Fact: Cyborgs are programmed to kill before you even notice that they’re behind you. You probably didn’t have enough time to notice the glow of their red eyes zeroing in on your pitiful Ford Taurus (no disrespect to Taurus drivers). Eh, at least it was quick and painless.

]]>http://blogs.tennessean.com/hashnash/2013/01/10/top-10-things-youd-hate-to-see-in-the-rearview-mirror/feed/0Ooh, Ahh, Amazing: Christmas around the worldhttp://blogs.tennessean.com/hashnash/2012/12/24/ooh-ahh-amazing-christmas-around-the-world/
http://blogs.tennessean.com/hashnash/2012/12/24/ooh-ahh-amazing-christmas-around-the-world/#commentsMon, 24 Dec 2012 17:04:38 +0000Karen Krafthttp://blogs.tennessean.com/hashnash/?p=462Let’s take a trip around the world and spread that holiday cheer!

Wondering what Christmas looks like in Korea? Check it out here. Want to see the holidays lights…in the City of Light? We’ve got it!

But first,A Nashville Christmas!

Here in Nashville: Guests walk by the lighted trees after the Opryland Lighting Ceremony November 14, 2012 in Nashville, Tenn. (Dipti Vaidya/The Tennessean)

Guests walk by the lighted trees after the Opryland Lighting Ceremony November 14, 2012 in Nashville, Tenn. (Dipti Vaidya/The Tennessean)

Who could forget the parade?: A look from above during the 59th annual Nashville Christmas Parade, with a theme of “Christmas Around the World” in downtown Nashville, Tenn. December 2, 2011. (Samuel M. Simpkins/The Tennessean)

A snowman waves to parade viewers on the Woodland Street bridge during the Christmas Parade December 7, 2012 in Nashville, Tenn. (Dipti Vaidya/The Tennessean)

Now, on to Residential Lights: We’ll begin with some photographs of individual residences and their choice of holiday lighting.

Wow! They don’t say “Go big or go home” for nothing! Check out the Christmas lights that illuminate Mike Bagwell’s house in East Cambridge Street in Springfield, Mo. The light display, which is made up of over 100,000 lights and synced to music, has caused traffic problems in the neighborhood. Yikes! (AP Photo/Springfield News-Leader, Nathan Papes)

Ever feel like you had neighborhood competition when it comes to Christmas lights? Well, unable to compete with her neighbor, Eric Cyr, Kristina Green opted to decorate her home, left, with a 450-light “Ditto” sign and an arrow pointing to Cyr’s 20,000-light Christmas display in Maricopa, Ariz. Ha! (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

How about lights on boats! The Petaluma Holiday Lighted Boat Parade illuminates the Petaluma River Turning Basin in Petaluma, Ca.. Now that’s impressive and the way the lights reflect of the water is nothing short of beautiful. (AP Photo/The Press Democrat, Kent Porter)

Let’s not forget about Chanukah around the world! Mark Cantora and his 1-year-old son Avi Cantora take a closer look at the giant balloon menorah during a Chanukah celebration at the Chabad Center for Jewish Life in Memphis, Tenn. on Dec. 6, 2012. Jewish families gathered to celebrate the second night of Chanukah with crafts, games and by lighting Tennessee’s largest menorah which Rabbi Levi Klein lit in front of the Chabad Center. (AP Photo/The Commercial Appeal, Jim Weber)

With the White House in the background and the National Christmas Tree at right, people stand for a song at the end of the lighting of the National Hanukkah Menorah, during an event sponsored by the American Friends of Lubavitch, on The Ellipse in Washington marking the second night of Hanukkah in Washington, Sunday, Dec. 9, 2012. The eight-day Jewish holiday began at sundown Saturday, Dec. 8. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

It’s a living Christmas Tree!: In this photo taken Tuesday Dec. 11, 2012, Unity Baptist Church members sing during their 28th annual music and drama presentation of the Living Christmas Tree in Ashland, Ky. (AP Photo/The Independent, Kevin Goldy)

Don’t leave football fans out: These Jacksonville Jaguars fans get in the holiday spirit while watching the first half of an NFL football game against the New York Jets, Sunday, Dec. 9, 2012, in Jacksonville, Fla. (AP Photo/Stephen Morton)

Or the cheerleaders: The Washington Redskins cheerleaders preform in holiday costumes during the second half of an NFL football game against the Baltimore Ravens in Landover, Md., Sunday, Dec. 9, 2012. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

The White House: This Nov. 28, 2012 photo, shows the official White House Christmas tree in the Blue Room of the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

Fireworks explode over the state Capitol following a the ceremonial lighting of the official state Christmas tree in Lansing, Mich. (AP Photo/Al Goldis)

And now,on to the rest of the world!

Ultra Orthodox Jews and children watch Hanukkah’s fourth candle lights during the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah in Jerusalem, on Dec. 11, 2012. The Jewish festival of light is an eight-day commemoration of the Jewish uprising in the second century B.C. against the Greek-Syrian kingdom, which had tried to put statues of Greek gods in the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem. (AP Photo/Dan Balilty)

Santa swims with sardines in South Korea: Dressed in a Santa Claus outfit, a diver feeds to sardines at the Coex Aquarium in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Dec. 11, 2012. Christmas is one of the biggest holidays in South Korea, where over half of the population are Christians. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

And from the looks of it, he’s pretty good under the water!

(Say it with me) Ooh, pretty: A Christmas tree stands lit up to celebrate the upcoming Christmas holiday in front of City Hall in Seoul, South Korea. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man, File)

People walk past a Christmas tree in Red Square, with the GUM State Department Store at right, in Moscow. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, File)

Why can’t we have this all year-round? The reflection on the building in this photo is too cool, as spectators watch the Christmas illuminations at the Royal Treaty street in Warsaw, Poland. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski, File)

Made of GOLD you say? A Christmas tree made of pure gold on display in Tokyo. (AP Photo/Itsuo Inouye, File)

Check out how they do it in Monaco! Christmas trees are decorated in front of the Monte Carlo Casino for Christmas and New Year, Wednesday, Dec. 12, 2012, in Monaco. (AP Photo/Lionel Cironneau)

Just darling: South Korean children wearing Santa Claus outfits leave after attending a ceremony by the Salvation Army to prepare charity pots for a year-end fundraising campaign for the underprivileged in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, Nov. 26, 2012. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

Light up the sky: Fireworks explode over a floating Christmas tree in Lagoa Lake at the annual holiday tree lighting event in Rio de Janeiro. (AP Photo/Silvia Izquierdo, File)

Or the puppies! A dog is dressed up in a Santa Claus costume during the inauguration of Christmas celebrations in Athens’ main Syntagma Square, on Tuesday, Dec. 11, 2012. Instead of the customary tree, this year the crisis-ravaged Greek capital will sport an assortment of smaller concept trees arranged on a scaffold. (AP Photo/Petros Giannakouris)

Even if Christmas isn’t your thing: Visitors take pictures near Christmas decorations outside a shopping mall in Beijing Wednesday, Dec. 12, 2012. Although Christmas is not traditionally celebrated in China, some shopping malls welcome the festival with colorful decorations as a chance to boost year end sales. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)

Want to share your holiday lights and decorations photos with us? We’d love to compile them into a Nashville-specific gallery here on #Nash!Share and upload your photos with us here! (Tag your photos as ‘#Nash’)

A holiday tradition in this upstate New York resort town has a peppermint twist: pig-shaped hard candies are sold with little metal hammers to smash them at Christmas. The peppermint pigs, which can weigh up to a pound, are considered good luck charms by some. Family members will take turns whacking the piggy tokens of holiday cheer into little candy shards.

“We do find that some people are a little taken aback: ‘What’s the whole idea of the pig and the hammer? What are you doing? And is someone insulting me by giving me a pig?’” said Mike Fitzgerald, owner of Saratoga Sweets, which makes the pigs that can be the size of a big bar of bath soap. Fitzgerald has pigs on his brain this time of year. A small crew at his shop south of Saratoga Springs in Halfmoon makes the hard candy from dawn to dark in a shop distinguished by boiling red pots of candy and an overwhelming scent of peppermint. Fitzgerald is hurrying to fill thousands of pig orders around the country.

Why pigs?

It could be related to the marzipan pigs northern European confectioners make at holiday time as good luck symbols. Fitzgerald said it’s possible chefs at the old hotels in Saratoga Springs in the late 19th century couldn’t easily make marzipan, so they improvised with peppermint hard candy. In the old days, the pig was placed on the Christmas dinner table. Father would wrap it in a napkin and crack it with the steel rod used to sharpen knives so the family could share the sweet-tasting bits, Fitzgerald said. But by the mid-20th century, the area holiday tradition went the way of lit candles on Christmas trees.

(In this Dec. 6, 2012, photo, Mike Fitzgerald poses with Willie the Pig, the store mascot, in the parking lot of his Saratoga Sweets store in Halfmoon, N.Y.)

In 1988, Fitzgerald made a first run of 60 peppermint pigs at the request of the local historical society. He was surprised to see people lining up to buy them, many of them older people who fondly recalled smashing pigs when they were young. He sold out his run and never looked back. “It’s been a pig race ever since. This year we’ll make about 130,000 pigs,” he said.

As Fitzgerald spoke, workers stirred bubbling tea pots filled with a Pepto-pink mix of sugar and corn syrup. The candy mix is hand-poured into cast aluminum molds to make one of three pigs: Holly (3 ounces and 3 1/2-inches long), Noel (a half pound and 5 1/2 inches) or the big man, Clarence (1 pound and 6 inches).

The hardened pigs have a shiny, glassy quality other hard candies with a higher corn syrup content lack. A quick strike by Fitzgerald’s hammer shattered a pig. “It has to break like glass,” Fitzgerald said with satisfaction.

It’s not as though sales of candy canes — more than 1.8 billion are made a year — are being threatened. But the pigs are a popular item in gift stores in Saratoga Springs and other retailers, dressed in red velvet bags with a shiny, silver hammer. (Once you get the hammer, you can order a refill without one.) “Thanksgiving sort of kicks it off and from here on in, it gets crazy,” said Marianne Barker of Impressions of Saratoga. And the pigs have extended beyond their upstate New York habitat through online sales and catalogs.

In Georgia, Lynn Barlow bought a pig on a lark in 1997 and shared it with her family on Christmas. A good luck streak followed that included a raise for her husband, one son bagging the biggest buck of his life and another son’s team winning a basketball tournament. The White, Ga., resident said pigs have been passed around at the holiday table ever since, now with grandchildren taking a turn with the hammer. “My husband hits it first,” Barlow said, “and then the peppermint is hard, so we usually go around the table twice just because the kids enjoy doing it so much.”

That’s what we are all waiting for, even though the majority of people won’t admit it. It’s the gift-giving season, and the best part of it is receiving! Even zoo animals wait all year, being good and “performing” for the crowds that come and visit every day. They, too, deserve a holiday treat. In England and Australia, anyway, that’s exactly what happens. Enjoy these photos:

Penguins look for fish placed around a Christmas tree at London Zoo, Wednesday, Dec. 12, 2012. The animals at ZSL London Zoo are set to enjoy a wild Christmas this year, with some very merry treats.

The penguins are treated to festive fishy gifts under the tree.

Even big cats want gifts.

These lionesses have definitely made it on to Santas good list and will be getting their paws on some presents!

Although some aren’t so willing to share! Hey, he’s king of the jungle, so let’s just let that one slide, huh?

Squirrel monkeys investigate a Christmas stocking given to them at London Zoo.

Inside they find scrumptious treats, an award for not showing up on the naughty list this year.

A giraffe eats at Taronga Zoo in Sydney, Australia, Friday, Dec. 14, 2012. Some of the zoo resident animals received some early Christmas-themed Environmental Enrichment activities from food-filled maracas to tasty Christmas Trees.

Are Christmas presents for the birds? Why, yes, yes there are! This White Tailed Black Cockatoo feeds on Christmas treats at Taronga Zoo.

A Meerkat searches for food in a paper Christmas house treat at Taronga Zoo in Sydney, Australia.

It wouldn’t be Merrkat manor without holiday gifts!

And last but not least..An Aldabra tortoise bites into a watermelon at Taronga Zoo in Sydney, Australia. Slowly bust surely..he too will enjoy his treat for being a good boy this year!

(AP Photos from London Zoo by Kirsty Wigglesworth and Taronga Zoo photos by Rob Griffith)

Tennesseans! Who has photos of your pets enjoying the holidays? Upload them here (select the “General Gallery”) and we’ll add them to this post!

Not exactly sure if everyone agrees that this was or is a good thing, but it was inevitable …

Thanks to Korean artist PSY, ‘Gangnam Style’ swept the globe in 2012. The song and its accompanying music video went viral in August and continue to influence popular culture.

DID YOU KNOW:

According to UrbanDictionary.com, “Gangnam Style” is a Korean neologism mainly associated with the upscale fashion and lavish lifestyle of trendsetters in Seoul’s Gangnam district, which is considered the most affluent part of the metropolitan area. In colloquial usage, it is comparable to the English slang terms “swag” or “yolo”.

So while many may not agree that this chart topping song deserves as much recognition as it has gotten, you can’t deny it’s a catchy one. After all, since its release, ‘Gangnam Style’ is everywhere…oh oh oh

Hey, Sexy Lady…..Wanna see who else is doing it ‘Gangnam Style?’ Check it….